Friday, January 31, 2014

Energy Solutions - The Lesser of Two Evils

Until the day that SkyNet goes active, or we are assimilated by The Borg, energy management will continue to be a challenge and clash between two schools of thought: An Integrated, End-to-End system OR individual specific solutions/applications. Last week I attended the AHR Expo in New York City, the largest HVAC-related tradeshow in the United States. With nearly 43,000 attendees and 18,000 exhibitors, the sheer size of the show is staggering. As a solution provider, it brings into sharp focus the challenge of a crowded market place and cluttered messaging around energy conservation and generation. If it confusing to those of us in the business, how can the average buyer even HOPE to make sense of it all?

If you are a buyer or stakeholder in the energy needs of your organization –  the decisions around direction and implementation of an energy management system may leave you feeling like it is nothing more than a choice between lesser of two evils. What technologies do you need to address now? How do you “future-proof” your decision? What choices will provide the most value to your organizations with the resources you have available? What will help ensure that you look like a hero? What solutions will leave you updating your resume in a year? How do you choose?

An integrated solution? Or a piecemeal approach of disparate systems? Do you just want visibility? Or do you also want automation and control functionality embedded in the system? 

PLAYING IT SAFE
If you choose an end-to-end integrated solution from a legacy provider, most of the recognizable names and “industry leaders” you get a reliable (hopefully) closed system with budget-busting implementation costs and slow upgrade schedules, less flexibility, costly updates/upgrades, expensive annual maintenance plans and in many cases paying for your own information. You end up paying more and still don’t have “best-in-breed” solutions across the board. On the flipside, no one gets fired for playing it safe.  

The fact that I rarely hear mentioned is that the established names…the end-to-end integrated solutions…are in fact legacy systems built on old ideas, methodology and perspectives. One major player in this space originated as a machine control programming solution in the 1980’s. It had nothing to do with energy originally. Over time and due to market necessity, additional features were added and the solution morphed from machine controls to building controls. When choosing a direction for managing your energy portfolio, is a legacy system with legacy problems due to a legacy mindset really the best way to go?


DIY
If you don’t choose an integrated solution, trying to get several vendors to play nicely together can make an already painful project longer, costly and more painful. And exactly WHO is going to be responsible for integrating this new “solution” into a 10 year old control system that you don’t have the budget to replace? Most of the new solutions in the market are small companies that may be nimble, but don’t have the programmatic or engineering depth to help you successfully integrate the square peg into the round hole.

Trying to get your original vendor to help you will generate an endless stream of sales calls, ROI calculations and financing proposals to upgrade that older system. It generally does not lead to a smile and “Absolutely, we will help you integrate a small company’s product into our system. And if there is a problem, you can count on us to not blame them.” You are left chasing tails, losing hair and sleep – and still no solution to your problem. This of course assumes that you have the spare time and resources to force a solution that may not come easily.


WHAT DO THE EXPERTS SAY?
In July of 2013, research analysts at Groom Energy released a report evaluating intelligent energy management solutions for the enterprise. Their conclusion?

“No single energy management system meets all needs.”

In the analysis, it offered “Despite the trend of vendors broadening their product lines, many customer needs are site-and-load specific and are served best by best-of-breed vendor applications.” Other findings from the report suggested that larger vendors are beginning to dominate through acquisitions and expanding their product lines – with mixed success and painful integration processes that frequently miss the anticipated value. In the process, many venture-backed startups that have promising capabilities and in many cases a better targeted solution are struggling. Software that controls equipment has the highest ROI. And – no surprise here – energy savings are the primary driver in corporate investment.

A 3rd Option?
Telamon Energy Solutions identified many of the above trends late in 2012 and has been working behind the scenes to deliver a new approach for 2014 that blends the best of both worlds – a unified energy management, analytics and control platform that utilizies best-in-breed, cloud-based software integrated with existing or new infrastructure in a single, unified solution.

One Contract. One Contact.

We would love to show you an original approach for energy management – reimagined for today, affordable and able to meet your needs for energy management, conservation and generation. 

-Mark Brown
Channel & Business Development
Telamon Energy Solutions
 

Monday, January 20, 2014

Medical Solutions - Consumer Electronics Wrap-Up: Digital Health

The annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) held in Las Vegas, Nevada is the best overview of the latest and greatest in consumer technology. This year's CES saw an increase in digital health exhibitors - totaling almost 10% of total registered exhibitors. For more stats on this year's exhibitors and a full list of participating companies, see www.cesweb.org. From my perspective, digital health is broken into four categories at CES:

  1. Wearables
  2. Software as a Service
  3. Robotics
  4. Patient Centered Medical Home 
This year's CES showed a significant increase in Wearables. Hot buzz word for the show, Wearables were represented in product lines ranging from sensor enabled foam/cloth to bracelets and wellness watches. Think fitbit, iFit, and more. Simple product feature and functionality allows vital signs (heart rate, temperature, blood pressure, etc.) to be measured on the worn device and transferred seamlessly (e.g. Bluetooth, cellular, etc.) directly to a receiving hub for application upload to a simple, consumer-friendly dashboard. Wearables - defined to fit the active and "semi-conscious" lifestyle focus of health and wellness.

Although primarily a product show, CES has always had a prevalence of Software as a Service. Digital Health's focus - patient portals, EMRs, spend analytics, and health engines. This year's largest SaaS showcase - United Healthcare's main demonstration kiosk. No walk in the park, UHC showcased more than seven different portals with little differentiation between product class. One had the ability to tie in electronic medical records, another added the functionality of spend analysis, one supported physician interaction and communication directly via online portal. The opportunity - how about combining all into one cohesive, accessible module satisfying the interfaces for clinician, employer, employee, caregiver, and patient? Additional SaaS categories included such innovations as 3D surgery simulations to calorie/nutrition apps. We have a long way to go in combining all features and functionalities in digital health to a holistic solution.

 Robotics - who doesn't love robots? The feasibility of owning a health focuses robot is more consumer fantasy than consumer purchase. However, the latest and greatest do support a Jetson's moment. From mo-ped like robots with a videoconferencing "face" to at home robotic arms for immobile patient support - robotics are truly the wave of the future or at least for the most innovative and well-funded networks.

Patient Centered Medical Home - take all of the above, combine, and focus on in-home deployment and you have CES' focus on PCMH. PCMH is not a new term but the ability to digitize for automated, accessible and accurate networked health information continues to advance a new health frontier. Endless solutions from smart home + smart health to full in-home motion and fall detection, PCMH product lines support the gambit of mass adoption positioned by healthcare providers to the latest in automation for luxury consumers. Samsung's smart home accounts for full automation from a refrigerator supporting shopping lists and nutrition recommendations (via downloadable apps) to set-top boxes that convert home televisions into scheduled care plans with clinician direct interaction and communication - the future of PCMH is as wide as consumer fascination, adoption, and financial commitment. Welcome to the future of subscription health.

Catch news and reviews of 2014 CES through cnet.com, videos via LiveStream and general commentary via CESweb.org.

-Sunny Lu Williams
VP Business Development
Medical Solutions - Telamon Corporation

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Telecom Solutions - The Evolution of Telecom Networks

In my previous posts, I have written about telecommunications and its many facets as well as the evolution of Telamon from a supply chain management and logistics firm to the diverse business it is today. In this blog I want to look at the evolution of telecommunications networks and the impact on enterprise networks. 

In the not too distant past, telecommunications carriers transmitted primarily voice traffic. As technology advanced, the demand for enhanced services, such as data and video expanded the reach of the carriers to their customer base. Regulatory changes also blurred the lines between carriers of voice, video and data. Soon enough, we, as either business or residential consumers, had multiple options for acquiring services.

Over the last several years, we have seen our customers build very significant and sophisticated networks to address the needs of their firms. Utilities, multinational corporations, universities, medical facilities, even our Native American Tribal Nations have built networks that rival carriers in their complexity. The reasons for these high tech network vary - security, network integrity and bandwidth requirements - but they all require and utilize the products and services that Telamon  provides. With the extensive training in telecom standards, Telamon has been able to parlay this experience to the enterprise sectors we are now calling customers. These customers understand that if a company has these standards as part of the operational DNA, much of the risk in choice of a vendor has been removed. More and more are relying on our engineering, supply chain and installation services to augment their existing resources. Telamon strives to integrate with our customers and truly become a team.

Telecommunications continues to evolve just as Telamon has over the last 29 years. 

-Suzanne Beck
VP Business Development
Telecom Solutions - Telamon Corporation